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Chapter 1 - Prologue| I Died

I didn't see the car coming.

One moment I was crossing the road to meet my boyfriend attour usual diner, the next there was impact, pain, and then...nothing.

When awareness returned, I could sit upright. But my body couldn't.

My soul hovered above myself, weightless and translucent. Below, paramedics swarmed around my unconscious form in the back of an ambulance, their hands moving frantically across my chest in compressions. The rhythm of CPR filled the cramped space—push, push, breathe. The monitor flatlined, then spiked weakly.

"What's happening?" I whispered to no one, reaching toward my own face. My fingers passed through flesh like smoke through air. "Am I...am I dead?"

"Not yet."

The voice was deep, detached, and came from directly across from me.

My head snapped toward the sound. Seated on the bench beside my body was a figure I hadn't noticed before—a man cloaked entirely in black, the hood drawn so low it concealed his face in shadow. Between his legs rested a scythe, long and ancient, the blade catching the fluorescent light as it leaned against his shoulder.

My heart—or whatever remained of it—lurched.

"They're trying to save you," he continued, as if commenting on the weather.

Tears pooled in my eyes as I turned fully toward him, my voice trembling. "You can see me." It wasn't a question. "Are you the grim reaper? Are you here to take me?"

The figure tilted his head slightly. A sharp jawline emerged from beneath the hood, followed by the edge of a pointed nose.

"I might have to end your suffering," he said quietly. "But perhaps only after I take what I came for."

The words struck me cold. "Am I destined to die?"

He paused, then spoke with the weight of someone who had answered this question a thousand times before. "Right now, you stand in the middle. A threshold between the living and the dead. A stray soul."

My breath hitched. "My grandmother—she has no one else. Will I have time to say goodbye?"

The figure lifted his head just enough for me to glimpse a pair of eyes beneath the hood—burning, molten gold, like embers in the dark. They studied my face with an intensity that made me feel seen in a way I'd never experienced. Beautiful and terrible all at once.

The background noise of the medical team shouting instructions seemed to fade.

Slowly, he raised one gloved hand and waved it through the air before him. Shadows rippled outward like disturbed water, forming a flickering projection between us. Within it, a single golden thread stretched taut between two enormous stone slabs, pulsing faintly with light—fragile, but unbroken.

"You will have plenty time it seems," he said.

He waved his hand again, and the shadows dissolved into nothing.

The heart monitor beeped. Once. Twice. A steady rhythm.

My body gasped beneath the oxygen mask.

Relief flooded through me so powerfully I thought I might cry. "Thank you, Reaper."

"I did not give you life."

His voice carried an edge now, colder than before. He rose to his full height, and suddenly the cramped ambulance felt suffocating, his presence filling every inch of space. The scythe gleamed as he lifted it with one hand, effortless despite its size.

"I do not give life, for I am the opposite of creation. I am Death. God of the Afterlife." His burning gaze fixed on me. "I am Thanatos."

My eyes widened.

Thanatos. Not some folklore figure or pop-culture ghost. An actual god.

Before I could respond, he turned and pointed the tip of his scythe toward one of the paramedics—a woman in her forties, wiping sweat from her brow, breathing hard.

"Wait—what are you—"

A force yanked me backward, sudden and violent. The world blurred.

My eyes snapped open.

I was back in my body, gasping for air, the oxygen mask tight against my face. The paramedics were shouting—but not at me. I turned my head weakly toward the commotion.

The woman Thanatos had pointed to was on the floor, clutching her chest, her inhaler useless in her trembling hand. The other medics swarmed her, calling her name, starting compressions.

But I already knew.

The woman went still.

And in that moment, I understood. Death hadn't come for me.

He'd come for the nurse.

I had just been in the way.

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